Author Topic: another Ron Paul post  (Read 13247 times)

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_JS

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #45 on: November 08, 2007, 12:47:20 PM »
Ch?vez is clearly a nationalist. He is a great admirer of Sim?n Bol?var, a fellow Venezuelan, known as the "George Washington of South America", one of three people in the world that currently has a country (Bolivia) named after him. [The others are El Salvador, named for the Savior, ie Jesus, and Saudi Arabia, named for In al Saud.]

Cecil Rhodes had two nations named after him at one time: Northern Rhodesia, named after his northern part, and Southern Rhodesia. named after his nether regions. But history has cruelly changed both to Zambia and Zimbabwe, and alphabetization has moved them to the end of the Roster.

It is not easy to implement massive societal reform without great political power. Rebvolutions that tried to change their societies without it have been doomed to change very little (Bolivia, 1952, Chile under Allende in the 1970's, Mexico in the period before Obregon took over.

Chavez is a populist blowhard. I will provide a much more in depth reply when I have the opportunity.

I've recently changed jobs and am extremely busy right now. But I want to continue this discussion and I appreciate the thoughtful responses Prince.
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Xavier_Onassis

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #46 on: November 08, 2007, 03:13:16 PM »
Chavez has a great deal of charisma. This is not so obvious to those of you who do not understand Spanish.

He is still getting a sizeable majority of the votes in a country where any majority is unusual. I think he is far more easily understand to a Venezuelan.





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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #47 on: November 08, 2007, 03:50:40 PM »
I look forward to continuing this conversation, JS.
Your reality, sir, is lies and balderdash and I'm delighted to say that I have no grasp of it whatsoever.
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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #48 on: November 14, 2007, 04:04:35 PM »
I am late coming back to this because I've had a lot going on, and this reply will have to be relatively brief for the same reason.


Social Equality is a system of relationships where everyone has equivalent privileges and status, which can only exist in a classless society.


Okay, that would be one definition, and it is a good one. On the surface, ideally speaking, I like it. However, I think in practice it would be impractical to try to enforce this. If everyone were the same, wanted the same things in the same amounts to the same degree, it would work, but this is not the reality of human nature and human relationships.

I don't think it is against human nature at all. I think that it tends to go against White Anglo-Saxon Protestant modern thinking, acting, and structural beliefs about the way society "has" to be ordered. Yet, many cultures are far more comfortable with with my view of Social Equality and WASP's would be as well, if they would look beyond the short-term and really begin to see society as important.

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Social Justice is concerned with two primary areas: the Life and Diginity of the human person, and the development of a classless society to eradicate poverty.


Life, dignity and the eradication of poverty, these are things with which I am also concerned, and which I think are addressed better with liberty and trade than with socialism. Personally, I am less concerned with the existence of classes than I am with making them barrier-less. I don't care if there is a wealthy class so long as there is nothing to stop people from getting there, which to me, is the same thing as having no classes, because then there will be a range of financial levels and there will be no single distinct class. We are, as a society, slowly getting to that point. I'm not saying there are not problems or that there are no poor. There are, but I think those problems will be better addressed by more liberty not less and by more trade not less.

But it isn't the same thing. Whenever there is a massive accumulation of wealth then there is also deprivation. There is only so much capital possible at any given time. This is why economists dislike a high public sector to GDP spending ratio. It means that the capital left for the private sector is lower than they believe it should be - i.e. investments cannot be made because it is tied into public sector spending (the opposing argument would be made by Keynesian economists). The point being that there is only so much wealth to be had at any given time. So the barriers exist whether you wish they didn't or not. With democracy, as we have it those with the most accumulated wealth also have the most influence. Sure we need more liberty, but until we achieve a socialist, classless society - that liberty is nothing but the scraps that the elite wishes to grant us. Look at Jefferson's "self-evident" truths! All men are created equal? In this country? It wasn't true when he wrote it and it is not the case now. Not only is it not self-evident, it was pure unadulterated horse shite.


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I disagree. The problem comes from trying to force a redistribution of wealth that punishes people for surpassing some arbitrary limit of "unfair".

Why is it a punishment to come together and help your fellow man by developing a nation, a world, free of poverty? Free of hunger? With healthcare, education, and guaranteed employement for all?


Heh. Cute. I did not say punishing people for coming together to help others. I'm not against that and you know it. I am 100% for people coming together to help others, and if I like your group of people coming together to help others I'll even join you and help if possible. The problem is not people coming together, is not even persuading people to come together to help others. The problem is forcing other people who disagree with you to participate in your agenda whether or not they want to do so. The problem is punishing people for surpassing some arbitrary limit of "unfair" economic success.

What punishment? Either we are equal or we are not. My problem is that you are calling it punishment, and I don't see it as that. In a classless society this idea of accumulating wealth at the expense of society becomes an irrelevancy. It is not punishment because it is not there's, yours, or mine any longer.

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The problem there is with Nietzschean concepts of individualism that disregard society.


That might be a problem for some, but not for me. I do not hold concepts of individualism that disregard society. My concepts of individualism embrace the notion of society, of people working together, of protecting society by protecting the individual. I'm not out to strengthen in individual at the expense of society. I believe that if we strengthen the individual, meaning not one person only but all individuals as individuals, then we will by extension strengthen society. Society is, after all, a collection of individuals.

That is a paraphrase of a famous quote by Maggie Thatcher, and more wrong a person could not be. Though, I will credit you for not entirely dismissing the notion of society completely. It is interesting that you breakdown society into the components of individuals. I tend to think of individuals as a reflection of society, among other factors.

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There are some very successful companies owned by the customers and others owned by the employees. I agree with you, of course, on the issue of trade, labor, and the relationship of mega-corporations with the government. Yet, I'm realistic too. That is democracy. It may not be textbook democracy for wide-eyed high school American History students, but it is the grotesque reality whether one is a Democrat, Republican, Labour Party, Conservative Party, SPD, or CDU/CSU, Liberal, NDP, or Tories. That is part of the Neoliberal Consensus. That is part of Capitalism's reign.


I do not agree. Corporations partnering with government to control industry and business is not democracy. And frankly, imo, it is not capitalism either. I support capitalism, but I do not support the anti-capitalistic, competition and market stifling partnership between corporations and government. We do not have it because it part of capitalism. We have it because it is part of what happens when people cede power to the government. When we demand government regulate to the degree that we have, the partnering of corporations and government is inevitable. We will not solve this by demanding government do more, the partnership will only grow stronger.

No, this is capitalism and the democracy it has created. Even worse is the horrible discrimination that on your best day you must admit has been a serious black eye to capitalist nations. Still today, both in the public and private sectors an individual is limited in her advancement for no other reason than she is a woman, or black, or came from a poor background. In this very country! We kept up trade with white racist South Africa for years, and why? Because we had far too much corporate investment not to. Not to mention all the politicians who winked and nodded (Reagan and Thatcher) at how domestic affairs were handled there.

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Socialism promotes that the people establish control within a classless society. There is no ruling elite or bourgeoisie. (In fairness there are different schools of socialism, as with libertarianism, so I'm going to address my views as I suspect you will do with your own views.) The works councils will govern and democracy will be paramount, without the hindrances placed on it by social status.


Okay, but I do not see how we get there by giving the government more power. That seems the opposite of giving power to the people. Giving the government more power and authority, with less and less in the hands of individuals seems to me the opposite of empowering the workers.

Who is claiming to give the government more power? Socialism can only come through the people. It cannot be achieved through Congresses and Parliaments.

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Capitalism most certainly promotes inequality. The data has proven this with the rising Gini Coefficients over time for most western nations (with the exception of Scandinavia). The United States ranks with Cameroon and Uruguay. Denmark, Belgium, Sweden, Norway are the top in equality by Gini Coefficient standards and notably have larger welfare states than the United States (or Cameroon or Uruguay).


Okay, that would be income inequality, which, to my thinking, is not the same as social inequality. Apparently you equate the two. I do not. Which is why, when we speak of social inequality and/or social equity, I think pointing out that there are different ideas about what that means is important.

As I said above, it is more than income inequality. Capitalism has given monumental strength to racial, gender, and other types of inequalities.

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Your comparison is still flawed. The former is based on mysticism, the latter on scientific socialism. Claiming the same goal is irrelevant in your attempt to make the two equivalent. You could say that a shaman and a medical doctor are both trying to heal a patient. That does not make the two equivalent to one another, though their goal is identical. Your logic is flawed and you're better than smear tactics.


You say this after claiming that your definitions of social equality and social justice come, at least in part, from Christian tradition. So think perhaps the comparison is not so far off as you would make out. And from my perspective, to keep this comparison according to my thinking, the shaman and the medical doctor do not have the same goal. The shaman wants to get rid of evil spirits while the medical doctor is going to treat physical problems. The Christian fundamentalist and the socialist (the Michael Tee style socialist at least) want to do the same thing. It's like two medical doctors having different approaches to the same problem. They both want to fix society through control even if their ideas about how are somewhat different. The fundamentalist Christians, at least the kind I'm talking about this discussion, are not looking to shake talismans and shout evil spirits away from society. They want to enact practical (in the sense of actual rather than mystical) controls on society to correct the problems they believe exist in society. The socialists (again, the Michael Tee style socialist at least) want to enact practical controls on society to correct the problems they believe exist in society. And I oppose both for the same basic reason, I don't believe society can be fixed by trying to strictly control it. So from my perspective, the comparison is valid.

Again, there are different types of socialists. If you want to discuss that with Tee, then you need to ask him.

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Who says there is no room for dissent?


When you call or at least imply that disagreeing with socialism is somehow not wanting to "to come together and help your fellow man by developing a nation, a world, free of poverty" that doesn't really leave a lot of room for dissent. So you tell me, is there room for a capitalist dissent in a socialist society? Is there room for libertarianism in a socialist society? Doesn't a socialist society depend a great deal upon everyone agreeing with (at least in general) socialism?

There are anarcho-communists, so I'd certainly say that libertarians have a place. The freedom of individuals is an interesting topic amongst socialists and communists. Some believe the government (commune, works councils, whatever form it is) should have absolutely no role in private individual lives. Others, like myself, believe that it is the responsibility of the works councils to ensure that some basic principles and societal norms are maintained. Personally, I don't think capitalism should exist once classlessness is achieved, as it is an economic mechanism that promotes class. Yet, remember that socialism can only exist after capitalism has achieved its peak.

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Socialism removes the system by which the elite attain their advantages. It also removes the system by which the bourgeoisie live what Pink Floyd would call a "comfortably numb" existence. It removes any reason for nationalism and the wars that erupt from that. People are people. They are no longer their assets, their vehicles, their possessions, their ability to delegate power over other people.


I confess, I have hard time believing it could accomplish all that. That sounds altogether utopian to me. So tell me why it isn't.

There are utopian elements, sure, but it isn't utopian because there is a legitimate understanding of how those structures work to affect society.

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Sure, liberty is real to those who have been locked away or enslaved. But we're not really talking the same "liberty" there, are we? This is a bit disengenuous of the libertarian. In fact, this only goes to prove the point more. The Government of our time can grant liberty, or it can take it away (jail, slavery). That was my point above. There is no, what Thomas Jefferson called, "self-evident truths." There is no liberty that exists for all men. So long as class exists, there is no real freedom for the majority of mankind. Who has real political power? Who has real freedom and authority? George Bush, John Kerry, Vladimir Putin, or you?


"The Government of our time can grant liberty, or it can take it away (jail, slavery)." Indeed. But it can also make laws that confine human action. A slave that has free movement and self will on the plantation is still a slave. A citizen who must conform his actions to the regulations of government (beyond those laws that protect basic human rights) or the worker council is not living in liberty. Okay, so you don't agree that Jefferson's self-evident truths are self-evident. But Jefferson was one of many men who felt their liberty was unduly confined by their government. Do all people have the same degree of liberty? No. In some ways I have more liberty than the people you named because I don't have the responsibilities of government. I have more liberty than people in the military, but then right now we have a volunteer military, so those people chose to be in the military. Should the rest of society be made to live at the military to be fair, to keep those of us not in the military from having more liberty? But what about the poor? Don't think I want to see them limited. And I'm not saying all poor people choose to be poor. Certainly I want to see poor get help to improve their financial states and to have access to health care and decent shelter and all that, but I also think people ought to have the liberty to choose a level of financial achievement that suits them. Some people want a lot. Some people want a little. Some want something in between. I see no reason to interfere in that liberty. If you take that away, that is not social equality or social justice, imo.

The problem with your explanation is that you place every individual in a vacuum as if one's actions has no consequences on another. Slavery in the United States had consequences that still exist to this very day. The mega-wealthy living opulent lifestyles have consequences. The modern notion of individualism and low taxation has consequences, especially on the poor. Someone "reaching the level of financial achievement that suits them" sounds nice on its face, but is it really? What are the consequences? Who did he step on and over?[/quote]
I smell something burning, hope it's just my brains.
They're only dropping peppermints and daisy-chains
   So stuff my nose with garlic
   Coat my eyes with butter
   Fill my ears with silver
   Stick my legs in plaster
   Tell me lies about Vietnam.

Plane

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #49 on: November 14, 2007, 04:17:34 PM »
"Whenever there is a massive accumulation of wealth then there is also deprivation. There is only so much capital possible at any given time."


Both of these statements are totally in error.

Where there is a lot of capitol creation ,deprivation is lessened.

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #50 on: November 14, 2007, 04:24:27 PM »
Okay, back to JS's post.


Socialism offers the cold truth of reality.


Does it? From what I've seen, I don't think so. I think it offers a really nice sounding idea that might work if the world was one single homogeneous culture with everyone in agreement philosophically, but that is not the case, so I have to question that what socialism offers for society as a whole is reality.

Again, I think you are mistaking WASP American society for the entire world.

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Without classlessness, without social justice, social equality...we keep going the same direction. What is that direction? Inequality becomes greater and greater. Wealthy nations dominate poor nations. The wealthy class dominates the poor as the middle class feeds off the scraps and thanks the wealthy for it. Democracy continues to promote the elite, who continue to promote what is best for them and their class. Liberty shrinks as class consciousness grows and more and more people begin to understand that society is falling apart.


In a way I agree, and in another I disagree. As you mean classlessness and social justice and social equality, I disagree. As I mean classlessness and social justice and social equality, I agree. Eliminate subsidies, tariffs, artificial barriers to trade and allow capitalism to do for others what it has done for us. Allow the farmers in the poorer countries to trade their cheaper foods and the price of food goes down and the farmers' economic status is raised, improving life for them, their families and their communities. Stop allowing government and corporations to partner up to restrict competition and to make entering the market as difficult as possible, and allow people to innovate in the market and take risks. Create a chance for the little guy to challenge the larger business without having to be a huge corporation and you'll see more wealth redistribution, and it'll happen naturally, without forcibly taking money away from people. What was that you said about removing nationalism and the wars that arise from that? Open trade if that is what you want. The more people seek to get along with trading partners in other cultures, the more understanding between cultures there will be, and the less likely people will be to make war on their neighbor. Trade goods, not bullets.

You seem to think that I am against freedom of trade and I am not. The problem of course is that farmers in poorer countries will never be allowed to compete, because they cannot. Look at Mexico and their poor farmers. They were swallowed up and destroyed by ADM after NAFTA. They simply cannot compete with American agribusiness, so a few large landowners in poor third world countries get wealthy by selling their land to American Agribusiness. Then it can either be used for agriculture, or allowed to lie fallow forevermore. You paint a nice little David & Goliath scenario, but in the real world it doesn't happen like that. Our own small farmers in this nation cannot compete with ADM (and the other major companies) even with both being subsidised.

As for trade putting an end to nationalism and wars...history seems to prove the opposite, but I'm all for it. I support free trade and free movement of the labor market as well.

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The socialist will talk about social equity in terms of everyone having the same of everything. Me, I see social equity as people being free to find their own place in society. Some people want to be rich. Some people like a simple middle class life. Allowing them both to decide, that makes them socially equal.

That isn't social equity...see above.


It may not be social equity to you. But it is social equality in my opinion. People free to pursue their own happiness, each as they choose without artificial barriers in the way, this is social equality. I don't equate wealth to class, and I don't need a lot of money to be happy. Some people want a lot of money and all that. Some people like living simply, with as few possessions as possible. I'm somewhere in the middle of that. I also believe in the whole love your neighbor as yourself and as you want others to do to you so do likewise to them. So since I don't want someone else deciding for me how I should live deciding what and how much I can have, essentially deciding for me what sort of life I should have, I do not desire to decide that for others. The rich business man, if he is honest, takes nothing from me unless I choose to exchange for his goods or services. I take nothing from others unless they choose to give it to me. How is this not social equality?

Yes, I know many poor people need help. I want them to get that help, and I contribute to that whenever I can reasonably do so. But I see things done in the name of social equality or social justice that harm the poor. Socialist ideas, for example minimum wage laws, get enacted and, as best I can determine, contribute not to the alleviation but the entrenchment of poverty. And so I cannot help but question why more socialism is the solution.

Minimum wage laws are not a socialist idea and in fact, if you read British history you'll see that in the UK the Trade Unions vehemently opposed the wage floor (until the so-called "moderate" union leaders came in the 90's with Tony Blair). If the United States had decent Trade Unions a minimum wage would not be necessary and it is by no means a socialist notion, at least not in my book. It is your typical bourgeoisie tool, used very effectively by the right and center.

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It isn't about "making other people comfy." It is about removing class from society and establishing social equity and social justice. It is about eradicating poverty. It is about establishing work for everyone. It is about world class education, universal health care, top of the line scientific research, not allowing anyone to go hungry, not allowing anyone to go cold, establishing a safety net with no cracks, top of the line infrastructure, etc.

It is a society for everyone and not for the few and privileged.



It's about establishing a utopia where everyone is safe and cared for. I don't believe you can do it. Not to the degree that you seem to be claiming.

Don't get me wrong. I like your goals. I read that paragraph of yours though, and I am reminded of all the times you accused me of of ivory tower thinking. Because that is what I think you have there. You're trading liberty for safety to remove the bad consequences from the world. While I admire the goal of eliminating suffering, I don't believe you have presented, as you promised, the cold hard truth of reality. I think you're trying to escape it.

I don't fault you for wanting a better world. I want a better world too. But I don't believe socialism can deliver what you say it can. I don't claim liberty as a panacea for the world's problems. But I think it is the best way to get to the long term solutions that will do the most good for the most people. Trying to define for other people what should make them happy is, I think, not a solution with long term beneficial results. It is, in point of fact, a source of many of the world's problems.

[/quote]

I'm not trading liberty for safety at all. Again, I think you misunderstand socialism to a great degree. For example, you use the phrase: "trying to define for other people what should make them happy" and that isn't even close to what socialism does. Social Equality and Social Justice are what they are. Happiness is an internal emotion, it has nothing to do with socialism (or capitalism, or any political philosophy for that matter). What I see in liberty is just the status quo of promises that democracy and capitalism continue to make and break on a daily, monthly, yearly basis. Yet, still we have the growing gap between rich and poor. Still we have terrible discrimination. Still we have a society, not only content, but even some are damned proud that we disregard our poor, starving, homeless, sick.

And you offer empty promises of more liberty? To do what? Starve more freely? Die of preventable disease with more liberty? Bourgeoisie noise.
I smell something burning, hope it's just my brains.
They're only dropping peppermints and daisy-chains
   So stuff my nose with garlic
   Coat my eyes with butter
   Fill my ears with silver
   Stick my legs in plaster
   Tell me lies about Vietnam.

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #51 on: November 14, 2007, 04:26:04 PM »
"Whenever there is a massive accumulation of wealth then there is also deprivation. There is only so much capital possible at any given time."


Both of these statements are totally in error.

Where there is a lot of capitol creation ,deprivation is lessened.

1. At any given moment in time (t) there is only so much capital. That is true.

2. Show me one state that has had a very wealthy upper class and does not have a very deprived lower class.
I smell something burning, hope it's just my brains.
They're only dropping peppermints and daisy-chains
   So stuff my nose with garlic
   Coat my eyes with butter
   Fill my ears with silver
   Stick my legs in plaster
   Tell me lies about Vietnam.

Plane

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #52 on: November 14, 2007, 04:31:30 PM »
"Whenever there is a massive accumulation of wealth then there is also deprivation. There is only so much capital possible at any given time."


Both of these statements are totally in error.

Where there is a lot of capitol creation ,deprivation is lessened.

1. At any given moment in time (t) there is only so much capital. That is true.

Patiently no , it is not, there is no reason to think so.
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2. Show me one state that has had a very wealthy upper class and does not have a very deprived lower class.




The United States

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #53 on: November 14, 2007, 04:37:37 PM »
So at any time (t) there is an infinite amount of capital?

The United States? We don't have deprived poor?

How do you think poor people live, Plane?
I smell something burning, hope it's just my brains.
They're only dropping peppermints and daisy-chains
   So stuff my nose with garlic
   Coat my eyes with butter
   Fill my ears with silver
   Stick my legs in plaster
   Tell me lies about Vietnam.

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #54 on: November 14, 2007, 04:46:37 PM »
The United States? We don't have deprived poor?

I guess it has to do more with your definition of "very deprived poor" versus Plane's definition.

I caught that right off - you didn't define the term, therefore you can dismiss any claim.
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Plane

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #55 on: November 14, 2007, 04:57:46 PM »
So at any time (t) there is an infinite amount of capital?

Infinate no . Fixed no. Capittal is a product of labor , a product of harvest , a product of seervice and a product of organisation. The amount availible is in constant flux and depends a lot on who is creating it and how many are creating it.

And not the least on how effectively they are creating it. There is no fixed amount of capitol , if there were how would there be more now than the previous year ? or even more now than in previous centuries?

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The United States? We don't have deprived poor?

How do you think poor people live, Plane?


In trailer parks , where I lived four years ago , my neighbors were low on funds for a plethora of reasons , I was low on funds because of an ongoing divorce , I lived for eighteen months without turning on the AC or heat.

I coped but didn't blame the wealthy , how would anyb wealthy person consumeing one iota less have helped me or any of my neighbors?.

Xavier_Onassis

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #56 on: November 14, 2007, 05:22:39 PM »
I coped but didn't blame the wealthy , how would anyb wealthy person consumeing one iota less have helped me or any of my neighbors?.\
==================================================\
Surely you jest. A wealthy person might contribute money to a church or a charity that would, in turn, pay your heating and cooling bills.

For what it is worth, I am relatively prosperous, but my house has no furnace or central air. I use plug-in circulating oil radiators when it is cold (usually only in February) and a single window AC in the Summer. But of course, Miami is warmer than Georgia by far.


Specific rich people are not the cause of specific poverty. However, if you had lived in Norway instead of Georgia, the government would have provided you with both adequate housing and heat. It would find money to do this by taxing the wealthy more than they do here (15% on capital gains, typically here, and 40% in Norway), and by spending money from the nationally owned Northsea oil wells to subsidize your housing and heat.

In Socialist nations, the equalizer of living standards is the government. In the US the government does very little of this. I think these days Hugo Chavez will sell home heating oil via Citgo to poor Americans in some states.

If General Motors did not pay their executives salaries in the millions, they could pay their assembly line  workers more, of course.

Roger Smith was president of GM for a number of years in the 1980's, and every year the quality of GM cars declined and the company lost market share, but Roger got a fat, juicy raise, while line workers got thrown out of jobs.


"Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana."

Plane

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #57 on: November 14, 2007, 05:45:50 PM »
I coped but didn't blame the wealthy , how would anyb wealthy person consumeing one iota less have helped me or any of my neighbors?.\
==================================================\
Surely you jest. A wealthy person might contribute money to a church or a charity that would, in turn, pay your heating and cooling bills.

For what it is worth, I am relatively prosperous, but my house has no furnace or central air. I use plug-in circulating oil radiators when it is cold (usually only in February) and a single window AC in the Summer. But of course, Miami is warmer than Georgia by far.


Specific rich people are not the cause of specific poverty. However, if you had lived in Norway instead of Georgia, the government would have provided you with both adequate housing and heat. It would find money to do this by taxing the wealthy more than they do here (15% on capital gains, typically here, and 40% in Norway), and by spending money from the nationally owned Northsea oil wells to subsidize your housing and heat.

In Socialist nations, the equalizer of living standards is the government. In the US the government does very little of this. I think these days Hugo Chavez will sell home heating oil via Citgo to poor Americans in some states.

If General Motors did not pay their executives salaries in the millions, they could pay their assembly line  workers more, of course.

Roger Smith was president of GM for a number of years in the 1980's, and every year the quality of GM cars declined and the company lost market share, but Roger got a fat, juicy raise, while line workers got thrown out of jobs.




I had a pretty good income , but my expenses suddenly ballooned , I know a guy that decided to accept real poverty rather than pay what he owed after a divorce. He just quit doing anything .

This was not a realistic option for me , but I did accept a lot of help from freinds and family. In the end the divorce settlement was a lot kinder to me than the sepration agreement .

There is a state program here that pays the fuel cost for the truely broke , I didn't even check whether I was qualified or not because I expected my destituteness to be temporary.

And it was .

Some of my neighbors had no real income and some of my neighbors had illeagal income the government can't tell the diffrence .

Some of my neighbors were just as I, out of money because of divorce , the no 1 cause of poverty in my state.

Since at least for that year you had much more than I did I suppose I could have confiscated your stuff and benefited but how long could that have lasted?

I might visit Norway someday but it sounds like I wouldn't want to live there.

Plane

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #58 on: November 14, 2007, 05:47:18 PM »
By the way , when it got freezeing I did heat my bathroom , I am a tough guy but there are limits to it.

Universe Prince

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #59 on: November 14, 2007, 09:26:15 PM »
I apologize now for typos and possibly missing words. This is along post, and I'm not feeling so well, so I'm just going to let it go as is.


I don't think [social equality as defined by JS] is against human nature at all. I think that it tends to go against White Anglo-Saxon Protestant modern thinking, acting, and structural beliefs about the way society "has" to be ordered. Yet, many cultures are far more comfortable with with my view of Social Equality and WASP's would be as well, if they would look beyond the short-term and really begin to see society as important.


I don't agree. Even in primitive cultures there are leaders and followers, there are those who want many things and those who want little, those who will work more and those who will work less. There may be cultures in the world where this is not so, but I do not know of one. In addition, I think you sell WASPs short by implying that they do not see society as important. Some may not, but many more do. There are numerous charities that support this, and think the issue is not WASPs not seeing society as important, but that a majority don't really agree that socialism is the way to go.


Whenever there is a massive accumulation of wealth then there is also deprivation. There is only so much capital possible at any given time.


But this is not a zero-sum situation. At any given time there may be a specific amount of capital available, but that does not mean that more cannot be created.


The point being that there is only so much wealth to be had at any given time. So the barriers exist whether you wish they didn't or not.


No one said making more capital or more money was easy. But it is not impossible, and generally not restricted to class or education level. Thomas Edison, J. C. Watts, Martha Stewart, et cetera. It can be done, and there are things we can do to make it easier. But Martha Stewart's success is not a barrier to someone else attempting a similar success.


With democracy, as we have it those with the most accumulated wealth also have the most influence. Sure we need more liberty, but until we achieve a socialist, classless society - that liberty is nothing but the scraps that the elite wishes to grant us.


If we are going to lay the blame for this on democracy, then the blame lies with people who support and vote for policies that tie business and government together. Which is to say, all those policies intended to regulate the market and correct for "market failures". Socialist policies, imo, have brought us to this point, so I have a hard time seeing this as a detriment of capitalism. Possibly one could argue against democracy, but that seems like a whole other topic best left for another time.


Look at Jefferson's "self-evident" truths! All men are created equal? In this country? It wasn't true when he wrote it and it is not the case now. Not only is it not self-evident, it was pure unadulterated horse shite.


That depends on what one means by equal. You seem to be thinking of equal in terms of wealth. I doubt that is what Jefferson meant.


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The problem is forcing other people who disagree with you to participate in your agenda whether or not they want to do so. The problem is punishing people for surpassing some arbitrary limit of "unfair" economic success.

What punishment? Either we are equal or we are not. My problem is that you are calling it punishment, and I don't see it as that. In a classless society this idea of accumulating wealth at the expense of society becomes an irrelevancy. It is not punishment because it is not there's, yours, or mine any longer.


Very few people if any ever consider their accumulation of wealth to be done at the expense of society. And in many cases the accumulation of wealth occurs because someone is contributing to society. The person who runs the grocery store, the baker,  the barber, and more are all contributing to society. If, say, the baker is successful, has he succeeded at the expense of society? Has he deprived someone else? I think it is not so. But what about the extremely wealthy? What does some scion of some wealthy business owner contribute? Maybe something, maybe nothing. But I don't find it a push toward equality to say to the business owner that he is wrong for making a more comfortable life for his family. I think part of the problem I have with your thinking is that you seem to be wanting to define for everyone else what is and is not a contribution to society. Again, I come back to the impression that what you want is everyone living according to your ideals of social behavior, and I simply cannot agree with that.


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I believe that if we strengthen the individual, meaning not one person only but all individuals as individuals, then we will by extension strengthen society. Society is, after all, a collection of individuals.

That is a paraphrase of a famous quote by Maggie Thatcher, and more wrong a person could not be. Though, I will credit you for not entirely dismissing the notion of society completely. It is interesting that you breakdown society into the components of individuals. I tend to think of individuals as a reflection of society, among other factors.


I don't dismiss the notion of society at all. I guess you're talking about Thatcher's statement that society does not exist. I do think that is a stupid comment in and of itself because clearly society does exist. Personally, I just don't place society over the individual. And society does not exist before individuals. Society exists because of individuals. The thing is, society is never the same for all people. The Goths, the Goreans, the Wiccans, the Baptists, et cetera all live in sections of society that are in many ways different from one another. What is important to one group is not important to another. This sort of decentralized order arises because society is a collection of individuals. To impose an order from the top down is to disregard individuals as individuals. And I agree, to an extent, that individuals are in many ways influences by the society in which they live, but individuals can also influence the society. Menlo Park, Civil Rights marches, the Founding Fathers, I could go on and on about individuals and groups of individuals who changed society. I have a difficult time seeing society as something other than a collection of individuals, because to be, that is the reality of the situation, To try to claim something else would be, imo, trying to claim something that simple is not so.


No, this is capitalism and the democracy it has created. Even worse is the horrible discrimination that on your best day you must admit has been a serious black eye to capitalist nations. Still today, both in the public and private sectors an individual is limited in her advancement for no other reason than she is a woman, or black, or came from a poor background. In this very country!


I don't know how one can blame racism, sexism or other similar discrimination on capitalism. Capitalism doesn't make discrimination happen, individuals do.


Who is claiming to give the government more power?


Are you not one who advocates more wealth redistribution by the government?


As I said above, it is more than income inequality. Capitalism has given monumental strength to racial, gender, and other types of inequalities.


On the contrary, while I agree capitalism has resulted in people having some power of discrimination, I think it allows people of various groups to find success anyway. I'm not saying capitalism as it functions is perfect. People are involved, so it can't be perfect. And I'm not saying there is not more to be done to fight racism and the like, but as I said before, such discrimination is the fault of individuals, not of capitalism.


Some believe the government (commune, works councils, whatever form it is) should have absolutely no role in private individual lives. Others, like myself, believe that it is the responsibility of the works councils to ensure that some basic principles and societal norms are maintained.


Again, what I see is you wanting to see society controlled. But what I don't see is how you can possibly achieve that and have a classless society where no one is discriminated against and everyone is socially equal according to your definition. I think your means are at odds with your goals.


The problem with your explanation is that you place every individual in a vacuum as if one's actions has no consequences on another. Slavery in the United States had consequences that still exist to this very day. The mega-wealthy living opulent lifestyles have consequences. The modern notion of individualism and low taxation has consequences, especially on the poor. Someone "reaching the level of financial achievement that suits them" sounds nice on its face, but is it really? What are the consequences? Who did he step on and over?


I have no idea why you would think that I'm placing every individual in a vacuum. In point of fact, I am recognizing that people live in a society where the actions of one or some can have impact on the lives of others. This is part of the reason why I oppose things like corporate welfare, socialist programs, and closed borders. It also part of the reason I support things like capitalism, the protection of individual rights and helping others in need. Yes, the consequences of slavery are still playing out, and the proper response, imo, is not to make the individual the drone of society but to protect better the rights and liberty of the individual.

Your apparent assumption that financial achievement requires someone to "step on and over" other people is not correct. You're ignoring that I'm not talking about everyone wanting to be "mega-wealthy" because in reality, not everyone does. Many people are satisfied with a level that we would currently call middle class living. Even small business owners are not generally looking to be the next Bill Gates. They just want to do something they enjoy and to live with reasonable financial comfort. If someone sells a lot of a good or service that people are willing to buy then he's not stepping on anyone. He is merely making an exchange a good or service for money. This is part of how people cooperate. I don't have to grow my own vegetables or make my own shoes or find my own medical treatments. I can cooperate with others who do those things by exchanging something I have for something they have. People working together, contributing to society. Is this system perfect? Of course not because people are involved. But it is getting better.



You seem to think that I am against freedom of trade and I am not.


No, I just have trouble reconciling trade with a removal of the notion of property from society.


The problem of course is that farmers in poorer countries will never be allowed to compete, because they cannot.


On the contrary, I think they can. Eliminate tariffs and subsidies and the folks in poorer countries who can make, for example, sugar cheaper than our farmers will find themselves quite able to compete.


Look at Mexico and their poor farmers. They were swallowed up and destroyed by ADM after NAFTA. They simply cannot compete with American agribusiness, so a few large landowners in poor third world countries get wealthy by selling their land to American Agribusiness. Then it can either be used for agriculture, or allowed to lie fallow forevermore. You paint a nice little David & Goliath scenario, but in the real world it doesn't happen like that. Our own small farmers in this nation cannot compete with ADM (and the other major companies) even with both being subsidised.


You seem be assuming that the only thing holding the small farmer down is larger farms and businesses. Part of this picture is also tariffs, subsidies, regulations and assorted laws and fees that the government has imposed. I'm arguing that we get rid of all or most of that. If we did I think you would see that taking down the artificial barriers would help the poorer farmers accomplish more.


Minimum wage laws are not a socialist idea and in fact, if you read British history you'll see that in the UK the Trade Unions vehemently opposed the wage floor (until the so-called "moderate" union leaders came in the 90's with Tony Blair). If the United States had decent Trade Unions a minimum wage would not be necessary and it is by no means a socialist notion, at least not in my book. It is your typical bourgeoisie tool, used very effectively by the right and center.


I certainly don't see it as a tool of the capitalists. And I don't see the right pushing for minimum wage increases.


I'm not trading liberty for safety at all. Again, I think you misunderstand socialism to a great degree.


That is entirely possible. However, socialism as you present it looks to me a lot like trading liberty for safety.


For example, you use the phrase: "trying to define for other people what should make them happy" and that isn't even close to what socialism does. Social Equality and Social Justice are what they are. Happiness is an internal emotion, it has nothing to do with socialism (or capitalism, or any political philosophy for that matter).


I disagree. My political philosophy has much to do with allowing people the liberty to pursue happiness. Your version of socialism, with lack of all property and worker councils to enforce social behavior rules seems to me to be exactly about defining for other people what should make them happy. Contributing to society according to the rules of socialism and as enforced by socialists is what people are supposed to want to do, apparently. You leave no room for the individual because you have taken away something that is fundamental, the right to property. The right to property is not just about owning land and cars and such. It applies to the individual as well in that the individual owns himself. He owns his body, his labor, his time and his mind. Socialism takes that away. The individual is then owned by society and the worker councils. Why is this desirable? For the sake of social equality and social justice you tell me. Not so the individual can find his own happiness but so we can supposedly protect society. Safety for liberty. Controlling society to prevent individuals from behaving differently, having different social opinions, et cetera. This is intimately connected with happiness for the individual. And this goes back to me recognizing that people live in a society where the actions of one or some can have impact on the lives of others.


What I see in liberty is just the status quo of promises that democracy and capitalism continue to make and break on a daily, monthly, yearly basis. Yet, still we have the growing gap between rich and poor. Still we have terrible discrimination. Still we have a society, not only content, but even some are damned proud that we disregard our poor, starving, homeless, sick.


I don't know any of those proud people, and I think possibly you're being unfair. What I see in liberty is the hope of changing the society for the better rather than being forced into a top down pattern of control. What I see in socialism is stagnation and social mediocrity.


And you offer empty promises of more liberty? To do what? Starve more freely? Die of preventable disease with more liberty? Bourgeoisie noise.


Come on, JS. I expect more of you than this. Here we are, back the same old tried and tired notion that wanting liberty means wanting people to suffer and dies in misery and alone. You could not be more wrong. I could talk about how liberty for the individual involves freedom to cooperate with others for common goals. I've done that many times before. But I want to focus on something else for the moment. The implication of the wanting liberty means wanting people to suffer and dies in misery and alone notion is that somehow socialism is the answer to all of society's ills. Socialism will make everyone equal. No one will starve and no one will suffer from preventable disease. And so on. The general idea being that socialism will protect people from the bad things that happen in life. Safety in exchange for liberty.

Supposedly socialism is inevitable because capitalism will peak and then collapse in on itself and the masses will then demand socialism. I don't buy it. One of the things that makes capitalism work is that it is a decentralized and adaptable system. The more people try, generally via the government, to move away from that decentralized and adaptable system to something more centrally structured and rigid, which in my opinion would be socialism, the more problems will arise. And if the goal is more power in the hands of the people, then a decentralized and adaptable system is exactly what we need. Will it solve all of society's problems. No. But will be better able to respond to problems and progress toward effective, long-term solutions.

I have nothing against people choosing for themselves to live in a socialist community. But I do have a problem with trying to force all of society to do so. The reason is that I don't believe much in one-size-fits-all solutions. People fault liberty for not addressing all of society's needs, but I think that is unfair. I don't believe it is up to liberty or any single ideology to address all of the problems in society. I think that is up to people. And not all people need or want the same solution. And I think we fail society if we try to enforce one solution on everyone. Some people may need a lot of help. Some folks just need to have others get out of their way. In my opinion, liberty allows people to find their own way to address the needs of others and allows people in need to find the sort of help that suits them best. Socialism, as best I can tell, says there is one way and all people must adhere to it.
Your reality, sir, is lies and balderdash and I'm delighted to say that I have no grasp of it whatsoever.
--Hieronymus Karl Frederick Baron von Munchausen ("The Adventures of Baron Munchausen" [1988])--